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Wyoming

As Seen on Film: Trek Through Wyoming with 'The Good Dinosaur'

Do you want to walk where dinosaurs once roamed?

Visit the USA’s western state of Wyoming. Thanks to Disney-Pixar’s movie "The Good Dinosaur," Wyoming is once again home to these fascinating prehistoric creatures.

Studying the Stunning Scenery

The Good Dinosaur takes place on an alternate timeline in which dinosaurs and humans coexist. The asteroid that scientists theorize extinguished dinosaurs misses Earth, allowing both species to flourish. The movie centers on an Apatosaurus named Arlo, who gets separated from his family and seeks to return home. Along the way, he befriends a young boy. The two travel across vast and challenging terrain to reach Arlo’s home in Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park.

Diane Shober, executive director for the Wyoming Office of Tourism, said the setting in her home state is evident in the first few minutes of the film. She said Arlo’s home looks like Wyoming’s iconic image of the Moulton barn along with the Teton Range in the background. “There is no mountain range on Earth that looks quite like the Tetons do, and the barn brings that western flavor to the scene,” she said. “It’s a uniquely Wyoming portrayal and one I love.”

Though photos of Wyoming are captivating, there’s nothing like visiting in person and exploring the landscape. That is why Disney-Pixar’s filmmakers traveled multiple times to the Cowboy State to study the scenery. Disney-Pixar’s teams used their observances and photos from these visits to inspire the terrain where Arlo’s animated adventure takes place. “Wyoming has an amazing diversity in its landscape, and it certainly shows through in the film.” Shober said. “Places like Yellowstone, the Red Desert and even Thunder Basin National Grassland are very well represented.”

Experience

Wyoming makes a great landscape for an epic adventure in animation and in real life. Many of the beauties filmgoers see on the screen can be visited in person. For example, after flying into Jackson, a city of 10,000 people in the western part of the state, drive about 130 kilometers north to Yellowstone National Park for an adventure in the USA’s first national park. Look for black bears, bison, the Grand Prismatic Spring and other hot springs, forests, a volcanic plateau and the famous geyser, Old Faithful.

Drive 24 kilometers west of Kemmerer, Wyoming, a town about 260 kilometers south of Jackson, to visit Fossil Butte National Monument. From there, venture to adjacent ranches like Warfield Fossils for fossil digging. “You’re almost guaranteed to go home with a fossil,” Shober said.

Shober also suggests visiting the Wyoming Dynosaur Center in Thermopolis. “Here,” she said, “you can work alongside professionals and help them dig, excavate, clean and catalog thousands of bones and other fossils.”